As the 2012 Presidential election heats up we are hearing more pundits and journalists postulate on the role the electoral college will play on the upcoming election. The electoral college, while an important factor in our Presidential elections, can prove confusing and could use some clarification.
The term "electoral college" is not in the Constitution, but the term came into use in the early 1800s as the unofficial term for the group of citizens who cast votes to elect the President and Vice President of the United States. As you know, ourpresident and vice president are not chosen by popular vote; rather we choose other people—“electors”—to choose these leaders for us. These electors, who have one vote each, serve in the electoral college for the sole purpose of electing the President and Vice President of the United States. Each state has the same number of electors as they have representatives in Congress, and that number is based on population.
No state, no matter how small in population, has less than three electors—Alaska, Delaware, Montana, North and South Dakota, Vermont, Wyoming and Washington DC all have three electors (or three votes each).
- The three states that have the most electors are California (55), Texas (34), and New York (31).
- The U.S. Constitution does not say how to choose the electors, so each state may decide for itself how to select these representatives.
- Electors can vote for anyone, but they almost always vote for the agreed-upon candidate
Why do we have an Electoral College?
The first reason is that the founders did not trust the people at large to make the right decision. In the words of Alexander Hamilton the people might not be capable of “analyzing the qualities adapted to the station” of n President, or might easily “be manipulated by tyrants.” Instead, as The Federalist Papers say, such a weighty responsibility should be vested in, “a smallnumber of persons, selected by their fellow-citizens…[who] will bemost likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to suchcomplicated investigations.”
The second reason for having the electoral college was to give more power to small states who were concerned that they would have little power in popular elections Mark Shulman of History Central points out that, in the last presidential election, each of Wyoming’s three electoral votes represented 70,000 votes cast by the people of Wyoming (a total of 210,000 votes were cast). While, in California, where almost 10 million votes were cast, an electoral vote represented 179,000 Californians—an “obvious advantage for the smaller state,” says Shulman.
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This factsheet was written by Fredericksburg Virginia Organizing Leader Ginny Downie for her website:
Justthoughtyoushouldknow.org
Sources: “How Presidential Elections Work,” State Electoral Votes, HistoryCentral.com, 1/2/11. Mark Shulman, “Why Was the Electoral College Created?” United States Presidential Elections, HistoryCentral.\com, 1/11/12. “U.S. Electoral College FAQs,” NARA: Ready Access to Essential Information, www.archives.gov, 1/1/12.